Abstract

Understanding the impact failure of particles made of brittle materials such as glasses, ceramics and rocks is an important issue for many engineering applications. During the impact, a solid particle is turned into a discrete assembly of many fragments through the development of multiple cracks. The finite element method is fundamentally ill-equipped to model this transition. Recently a so-called material point method (MPM) has been used to study a wide range of problems of material and structural failures. In this paper we propose a new material point model for the brittle failure which incorporates a statistical failure criterion. The capability of the method for modelling multiple cracks is demonstrated using disc particles. Three impact failure patterns observed experimentally are captured by the model: Hertzian ring cracks, meridian cracks, and multi-fragment cracks. Detailed stress analysis is carried out to interpret the experimental observations. In particular it is shown that the experimentally observed dependence of a threshold velocity for the initiation of meridian cracks on the particle size can be explained by the proposed model. The material point based scheme requires a relatively modest programming effort and avoids node splitting which makes it very attractive over the traditional finite element method.

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